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Lycogala flavofuscum (Ehrenb.) Rostaf. 1873 [1873-74]

Scientific name record
Names_Fungi record source
Is NZ relevant
This is the current name
This record has collections
This record has descriptions
This is a pest
This is indigenous
Threat status: Data deficient
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Lycogala flavofuscum (Ehrenb.) Rostaf. in Fuckel, Jahrbüch. Nass. Vereins für Natur. 27-28 68 (1873 [1873-74])
Lycogala flavofuscum (Ehrenb.) Rostaf. 1873 [1873-74]

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Indigenous, non-endemic
Present
New Zealand
Political Region

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(Ehrenb.) Rostaf.
Ehrenb.
Rostaf.
1873
1873-74
68
as 'flavo-fusca'
ICN
species
Lycogala flavofuscum

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flavofuscum

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Lycogala flavofuscum (Ehrenb.) Rostaf. 1873 [1873-74]

PDD 4361.
Fruiting body an aethalium, solitary or in small clusters of 2–5, often only partially separated, sessile and pulvinate to rounded or sometimes when developing on an inferior surface, pyriform and short-stalked, pyriform and appearing short-stipitat, silvery grey or ochraceous to purplish brown, mostly 2–4 cm in their largest dimension, occasionally much larger. Cortex nearly smooth, somewhat glossy, or minutely areolate, thick, brittle. Pseudocapillitium consisting of nearly colourless, branching and anastomosing tubules, wrinkled and papillose or nearly smooth, the larger branches 25–60 µm in diameter and the smaller ones 10–25 µm in diameter, the axils expanded, the ends free, rounded. Spores buff in mass, colourless by transmitted light, faintly reticulate, 5–6 µm in diameter. Plasmodium pale pink becoming buff, then pallid.
Reported from Europe, North America, South America, Africa and Asia but never common (Martin & Alexopoulos 1969). Apparently, this is a species characteristic of temperate regions of the Northern Hemisphere. First reported from New Zealand by Rawson (1937), based on a specimen collected in South Canterbury. Also known from Waikato and Otago Lakes
Decaying wood, often that of a tree that is still living and sometimes fruiting well above the ground.
Martin & Alexopoulos (1969), Neubert et al. (1991), Lado & Pando (1997), Ing (1999).
Fruiting bodies of Lycogala flavofuscum are large enough to be confused with those of a small puffball, but the thick, brittle cortex is quite different from the peridium of a mature puffball.

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Lycogala flavofuscum (Ehrenb.) Rostaf. 1873 [1873-74]
Lycogala flavofuscum (Ehrenb.) Rostaf. (1873) [1873-74]
Lycogala flavofuscum (Ehrenb.) Rostaf. 1873 [1873-74]
Lycogala flavofuscum (Ehrenb.) Rostaf. (1873) [1873-74]
Lycogala flavofuscum (Ehrenb.) Rostaf. 1873 [1873-74]
Lycogala flavofuscum (Ehrenb.) Rostaf. (1873) [1873-74]
Lycogala flavofuscum (Ehrenb.) Rostaf. 1873 [1873-74]
Lycogala flavofuscum (Ehrenb.) Rostaf. 1873 [1873-74]
Lycogala flavofuscum (Ehrenb.) Rostaf. 1873 [1873-74]
Lycogala flavofuscum (Ehrenb.) Rostaf. (1873) [1873-74]
Lycogala flavofuscum (Ehrenb.) Rostaf. 1873 [1873-74]
Lycogala flavofuscum (Ehrenb.) Rostaf. (1873) [1873-74]
Lycogala flavofuscum (Ehrenb.) Rostaf. 1873 [1873-74]
Lycogala flavofuscum (Ehrenb.) Rostaf. (1873) [1873-74]

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Lycogala flavofuscum (Ehrenb.) Rostaf. 1873 [1873-74]
[Not available]

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1cb191e4-36b9-11d5-9548-00d0592d548c
scientific name
Names_Fungi
1 March 1994
24 March 2003
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